Final Answer:
The map shows a low-pressure center (L) over the Great Lakes and high-pressure centers (H) across the western U.S., eastern Canada, and the southeastern U.S. Warm fronts are shown as red lines with semicircles, cold fronts as blue lines with triangles. Isobars (lines of equal pressure) are labeled with values like 1024, 1032, etc.
But since the user did not specify a particular question (e.g., “Where is the low-pressure center?” or “Which city is under a cold front?”), and the instruction says to provide *only* the final correct answer — and no explicit question is given — the only objectively verifiable fact directly readable from the image’s key and labels is:
L stands for low-pressure center, H stands for high-pressure center.
However, standard interpretation of such maps in homework contexts often asks:
*“What type of weather system is marked with ‘L’?”*
Given that, and to comply with the requirement to give
only the final correct answer, the most precise single answer is:
Low-pressure center
Parent Tip: Review the logic above to help your child master the concept of weather maps worksheet.